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Author Topic: viruses in fish  (Read 263 times)

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Online mike89

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New viruses, including coronavirus, found in Wisconsin fish
Healthy wild fish, including walleye and pike, were tested in the first study of its kind.
brown trout
A brook trout collected during a University of Wisconsin study that found several previously unknown viruses in many wild fish, including a coronavirus previously found only in birds. Contributed / Bryce Richter / UW-Madison
John Myers
By John Myers
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MADISON — Researchers at the University of Wisconsin have found 19 viruses in wild fish, most of them never before discovered, including one coronavirus in walleyes that was previously found only in birds.

The new study, published in the journal Pathogens, found the different viruses in 103 fish sampled from Wisconsin lakes and rivers, including walleyes, bluegills, brown trout, sturgeon and northern pike.

So far, the viruses don’t seem to be hurting the fish or impacting overall fish populations, the scientists note, and there's no indication the viruses can be passed to humans.

collecting wild trout to study
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources fisheries technicians collect trout from a creek near Viroqua, Wis. Blood from the wild fish was tested by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who found numerous viruses in the fish that no one had seen before.Contributed / Bryce Richter / UW-Madison
“We have no evidence that these viruses are making fish sick. The fish we tested were all healthy,” Tony Goldberg, a professor in UW's Department of Pathobiological Sciences, told the News Tribune. “It's possible some of the viruses could make fish sick under particular conditions … when the fish are stressed out for some other reason.

"But all the viruses are new, so we really don't know anything else about them yet, except that they exist.”


The effort, funded by Wisconsin Sea Grant, is the first of its kind in North America.

The study found the first fish-associated coronavirus, from the Gammacrononavirus genus, which differs from the type of virus that causes COVID-19. It was found in 11 of 15 walleyes collected by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

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Goldberg stressed that anglers should not be worried.

“None of these viruses can infect people,” he said. “It’s not a risk for people to catch, handle and eat fish because of these viruses. There’s no evidence that these viruses are causing any problems. They may just be part of the natural ecosystem of these fish.”

Maybe there are viruses out there that are a normal part of the ecosystem and they just infect a lot of fish, but they don’t cause disease.
Tony Goldberg, University of Wisconsin professor
Of the different species of fish sampled, lake sturgeon blood contained the most viruses, 97% of samples, with brown trout samples showing the least prevalence at 6%.

This virus survey builds on previous Sea Grant-funded research in which Goldberg studied viral hemorrhagic septicemia, or VHS, an often fatal fish disease. The DNR took blood samples from healthy-looking fish across Wisconsin to test for VHS antibodies. They saved the blood and used it for this current study on viruses.

Tony Goldberg UW-Madison
University of Wisconsin researcher Tony Goldberg takes a blood sample from a brown trout caught near Wauzeka, Wis., while Whitney Theil observes. The fish was collected by DNR staff members to test for emerging diseases in Wisconsin's wild fish. Contributed / Bryce Richter / UW-Madison
The new findings should help fishery managers when they routinely test the health of fish about to be released into state lakes from hatcheries or fish that are being shipped out of state. Sometimes, those releases are halted over concerns that the fish may carry a disease, and the study’s findings will help managers decide what is normal and what is concerning in terms of fish viruses.

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“This is a huge problem for fisheries managers that happens all the time,” Goldberg said. “We recently had a case where there were thousands of muskies that were ready to be released and they came back with an unknown virus. So, do you release them? Do you just keep them there? Do you kill them all?


"Maybe there are viruses out there that are a normal part of the ecosystem, and they just infect a lot of fish, but they don’t cause disease," Goldberg said.

While anglers shouldn’t be too concerned about the new fish viruses, they can help prevent any potential problems by not moving fish, including baitfish, from one lake to another.

“If you move a fish from one water body to another, you’re moving everything that lives on and in that fish and potentially causing problems,” he said.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently designed specific tests for the various viruses and expects to test a larger set of fish blood samples from around Wisconsin. They will map the viruses found so that fisheries managers can tell what’s normal for a particular watershed and whether stocking should proceed or not.
a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!

Offline LPS

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All of the water in your city pretty much goes back into a river.  The waste treatment plants especially in smaller towns take as much out of the waste water as their plant will allow them to but not all of it.  What their plant doesn't take out goes into a river or lake pretty much.  If your community wants more tax money to improve the waste treatment plant please contribute.  Now these things we didn't even know about have been slipping through for years.  Fish with antibiotics in them etc.  We learn as we go.  I was mostly in water treatment but did get involved in waste too.    Very interesting field.  Kind of miss it.

Online glenn57

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Dem fish should got vaccinated  :confused: :crazy: :rotflmao: :doofus:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline tangle tooth

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      Thanks. Stories like these make me wonder if the viruses have been here for years but not detected or if they really are new.
      Is it possible that eating an animal with trace amounts or small amounts of some viruses give you a small degree of immunity or make a major " attack" of a virus less harmful?
      I suppose if you spent much time thinking and worrying about all the parasites (good and bad) in the human body, some people might not sleep.
I wonder. Does Darth Vader have a sister named Ella? Bet she has her ups and downs.

Online Dotch

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Dem fish should got vaccinated  :confused: :crazy: :rotflmao: :doofus:

...and wear masks 😷
Time itself is bought and sold, the spreading fear of growing old contains a thousand foolish games that we play. (Neil Young)

Offline Leech~~

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"We have extremely important information we have found that could effect the health of fish eating humans. "News reporting
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  We're only telling folks that pay-the rest of you can Die!   :bonk: :bonk:   :rotflmao: :rotflmao: :rotflmao: :rotflmao: :bs:
« Last Edit: March 03/29/24, 07:18:24 PM by Leech~~ »
Cooking over a open fire is all fun and games until someone losses a wiener!